For those who like a little humor with their news, this year’s most memorable political moments are best showcased in an unusual medium: the e-card.

In the heat of election season, it came in the form of: “I wish Nate Silver could predict when I’ll stop hearing about the election.” Or: “May you be as creative in calculating your age as Fox News is in calculating election returns.”

But the end of the election hasn’t meant the end of their political cards, particularly for Someecards, the popular — and popularly snarky — e-card site.

”I’m confident the fiscal cliff will get resolved before I’m able to comprehend an article about the fiscal cliff,” says one. “Here’s to the fiscal cliff negotiations making my workplace seem comparatively calm, harmonious, and wildly interesting,” says another.

“Anything that people are talking about, anything that would have been water-cooler conversation, that kind of stuff we try to create humor around,” said Duncan Mitchell, a co-founder of Someecards. “We’ve always tried to be involved if we think it makes sense, if we can make it funny.”

He has noticed that the intersection of politics and pop culture — a nexus he hopes his cards will zero in on — has become more popular of late. Some examples:

“I think people, more and more, are gravitating [toward] requiring humor mixed in with their pop culture, their news, their politics,” Mitchell said. “I mean, that’s why ‘The Daily Show’ and ‘Colbert Report’ do so well, and I think we want to be part of that conversation going forward. … That does seem to be an industry on the rise.” Mitchell has noticed an increased interest in his site’s political cards from media outlets (including the outlet you’re reading right now).

“I think news is more interested in comedy, and comedy is interested in spending more time on news,” said Mitchell, explaining the burst in attention.

As with everything in politics, nowadays, there are intrinsic risks to the e-card website’s increasing dabbling in the world of governance.

“We do not try to take a political point of view,” Mitchell said, but he admitted that “we get people writing pretty regularly calling us ‘libtards.’”

“That seems to be the consensus from a certain group of people on the Internet.”

Democrats have thrived in the world of political comedy whereas conservative comedy has struggled in comparison. “I don’t know that the Democrats are better at humor; I think it’s maybe that the Republican side seems to open themselves to more jokes, if that makes sense. We try to make the jokes where they are.”

“I don’t think [President Barack] Obama has been hard to make fun of,” Mitchell said, but added, “He hasn’t had a ‘binders full of women’ moment” — a reference to Mitt Romney’s comments during the second presidential debate about hiring women and a topic that provided Someecards with plenty of copy.

“We made jokes about Obama kind of falling asleep during the debates and made it sort of a workplace card, but it’s just not going to stand out as much as a ‘binders full of women’ joke.”

“We have a lot of writers and we don’t poll their political beliefs or their party affiliation, so I don’t know what perspective they’re writing from, but if it’s funny, it’ll go on the site,” Mitchell said. “Some companies have that kind of equal-opportunity offender attitude and we’re just trying to make jokes that people like and will share. We’re not too worried about whether people call us libtards or if it hurts our traffic. People on both sides of the political spectrum have told us that they’re never coming back because of one card they saw that they didn’t like.”

And it’s the political cards that, far and away, provide Mitchell and his colleagues with the most amount of negative feedback.

“All the sudden, somebody who loved you will send emails saying, ‘I thought you were great but this card bashing Romney shows me you guys are all libtards and I’m not dealing with you anymore.’ … We’re an ad-supported business so we’re not trying to offend people but, of course, if you make a joke about something somebody believes, if you mention Jesus, if you mention Christmas, if you mention a politician, you’ll get a complaint.”